Created by Peter Temple
(1946-2018)

Well it certainly piqued my interest, so I did a little digging. Turns out Jack’s a character created by some guy called Peter Temple. And to Jack’s already impressive resumé, you could add cook, part-time debt collector and sometime private eye.

Jack was a Melbourne shyster, working criminal cases, but pretty much dropped out of everything when his wife was killed by a deranged client. When he finally crawled out of his prolonged binge of grief, self-pity and booze to rebuild his life, he sought solace in manual work, attaching himself to Charlie Taub, an crochety old furniture-maker who lives in Fitzroy, a Melbourne suburb.

But now he’s more-or-less human again, and has set up a non-criminal practice in Fitzroy. He often finds himself employed to find people who don’t necessarily want to be found — something for which he seems to have a knack. But he’ll take on almost anything, even debt collecting. As a detective, he’s got a keen eye and a dry wit, and he tends to play the odds, cutting a corner now and then if he thinks he can get away with it. Just like his preference in football, this lad prefers “Australian rules.”

When he’s not poking a stick into various nasty messes and (usually) getting in way over his head, he splits his time between the pub, the horse racing, football and — oh, yes — cabinetmaking.

An excellent, well-written series that balances heart and heat in equal measures. Of course, that meant for years you couldn’t easily find any of them in North America, or at least anywhere I looked.

Fortunately, the 2013 DVD release ofJack Irish: Set One, featuring two made-for-Australian-television movies starring Guy Pearce, seems to have rekindled interest in the series, and all four books in the series were re-released. Even better, though, is that the two films spawned a third, and that subsequently begat a series in 2016, again starring Pearce.

Arguably the most successful Australian crime writer of recent years, South African-born Peter Temple was best known for his Jack Irish books. He won Australia’s Ned Kelly Award for Best Crime Novel three times — more than any other writer. A former journalist, editor and lecturer, he decided to become a full-time freelance writer in 1995. He published his first novel, Bad Debts, which introduced Jack Irish, in 1996, and promptly won the Ned Kelly Award for Best First Crime Novel). He’s so far won four more (a record!), forDead Point (2000) and White Dog (2003), both Jack Irish books, and one each for standalonesShooting StarandThe Broken Shore, which also won the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger in 2007, making Temple the first Australian to win a Gold Dagger.

UNDER OATH

“Temple’s tales are gracefully choreographed, each turn of plot and leap of character establishment a deceptively simple exertion fraught with precise intent. While there are episodes here of gripping drama (a workplace explosion, an assault on Irish by that eponymous white dog), the author also takes time to cast a sharp and sometimes skeptical eye over Melbourne, both past and present. Early in this book, Irish presents a typical streetscape: “I got out and crossed the street, made my way in the late-morning throng, young and youngish people mostly, modish, long-haired, hairless, the odd balding man with a small tuft sticking out of the back of his head like a vestige of tail, people in Melbourne black, people in Gold Coast white, people in saris, sarongs, the odd suit, the odd secondhand pink tracksuit, many naked midriffs, some not much wider than a greyhound’s, some not much narrower than a 44-gallon drum but the colour of lard.” It’s hard to beat a crime novel packed with wit, savory prose, gripping action and a protagonist whose weaknesses enhance his strengths.”— J. Kingston Pierce, The Rap Sheet, on White Dog

“(The TV films) are solid examples of how the Australian and British TV industries still put some care into the production of genre movies, a format that’s been reduced to hack work and camp in America.”—The New York Times